July 6, 2020
Financial Emigration is now Tax Immigration
The South African Revenue Service (SARS) has a range of criteria to determine your
tax residency status and whether or not you should be paying tax in South
Africa, even if you no longer live there.
Tax Immigration
The South African Revenue Service (SARS) has a range of criteria to determine your tax residency status and whether or not you should be paying tax in South Africa, even if you no longer live there.
SARS looks at factors such as how much time you spend in South Africa and where your family and assets reside.
Tax emigration involves informing SARS that your tax status has changed and that indicates how you should, or should not, be taxed in South Africa. The most important thing to note here is that, as a South African tax resident, you pay tax based on your worldwide income and your worldwide asset base.
Whereas a non-tax resident only pays tax on their South African sourced income and South African sourced asset base.
Typically, you will engage with the South African government in three ways:
- SARS will determine how you’ll get taxed.
- The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) will regulate how your money moves in and out of the country.
- Home Affairs will document your citizenship status and rights in and out of South Africa.
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What steps need to be taken for tax emigration?
Your tax residency status defines how you get taxed in South Africa and what you have to pay tax on to SARS, however, filing a tax return is determined by whether you need to pay tax and not on tax residence.
Currently, there are three ways to change your tax status:
The ordinarily resident test
The first avenue involves the ordinarily resident test. This concept is relatively subjective. You’ll usually be seen as ordinarily resident if your permanent home, to which you normally return, is in South Africa. However, the courts have held that anyone considered ordinarily resident includes:
- Those living in a place with some degree of permanence
- Those with a permanent home
- Those who have their belongings stored
- Those who regularly return to a place following temporary absences
If you are able to showcase the contrary to be true, this test will prove to SARS that your intention is not to be a South African tax resident but to reside elsewhere permanently.
The physical presence test
The second way is the physical presence test. This concept is entirely time-based and is only applicable to someone who was not at any stage during the relevant tax year considered ordinarily resident in South Africa.
It’s important to take note: If your intention is to show that you no longer want to be a South African tax resident, you could be caught by the number of days you spend in the country. To be deemed tax resident, you will have been physically present in South Africa for a period, or periods, exceeding:
- 91 days in aggregate during the tax year under consideration;
- 91 days in aggregate during each year of the five tax years preceding the tax year under consideration; and
- 915 days in aggregate during the above five preceding tax years.
The third bullet amounts to an average of 183 days a year. If you don’t meet all three requirements, you will be considered a non-resident.
A Double Taxation agreement
Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs) are internationally agreed-upon legislation between South Africa and another country. South Africa holds dozens of such agreements with various countries and the main purpose of a DTA is to ensure that each country subject to the agreement knows what taxing rights they hold against relevant taxpayers.
A DTA will ensure that you are not unfairly taxed in both South Africa and the corresponding country. It provides a defence to double taxation and will determine where you must pay taxes on income received.
A DTA becomes relevant if you are earning an income in South African as well as abroad, or if you are a tax resident in South Africa (but have no income from a South African source) and you are earning income from a foreign source.
This type of situation often gives rise to confusion as to where you can or should be taxed, especially taking into account that a South African tax resident is subject to tax in South Africa on their worldwide income.
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Keep in mind, the onus falls on you to inform SARS once your tax status has changed and you are meant to do this during the tax year in which the change occurs.
If you don’t notify SARS of the change, they have the right to assume that you are a South African tax resident, which entitles them to raise assessments and tax you when they shouldn’t.
If there is tax due upon changing your tax status, SARS is allowed to levy administrative penalties for non-declaration and non-payment. These penalties can go up to 200% depending on the case in question.
Tax emigration should be reported in the tax return covering the period you change your tax status. As it is, you might be reporting to SARS much later than the actual event (given tax year cycles).
However, it’s important to be aware of the changes that will apply retroactively when filing.
Reporting the change at a later date entitles SARS to demand you pay tax on the asset base you have at the time you make the change notification, not when it actually happened.
The day before you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you will be deemed to dispose of your worldwide asset base at market value. This triggers a Capital Gains Tax (CGT) event – also known as an exit charge.
CGT is part of income tax and comes into play when you make a profit from selling something you own (an asset). The tax is calculated on the profit you make and not the amount you sold it for. As such, on the day you are set to become a non-resident you’ll be deemed to buy your asset base back – all for tax purposes.
However, any fixed property situated in South Africa is excluded from this equation as it is always subject to South African tax.
When you change your tax status, SARS will deem there to be an additional period of assessment due during the tax year. This will require a provisional tax return to be done if your taxable income exceeds R1 million in that tax year.
If that is the case, your taxes will be due on the day you leave, even if the tax year hasn’t ended. If you fail to pay at this stage, and you do your return at a later time within the same period, SARS can go back to the date you left and claim a late penalty.
The day before you become a non-resident for tax purposes, you will be deemed to dispose of your worldwide asset base at market value. This triggers a Capital Gains Tax (CGT) event – also known as an exit charge.
- Up until the moment you change your tax status, you will get taxed on your worldwide income like normal
- On the day of the change, you’ll be due to pay an exit tax (CGT)
- On the day of the change, you may have to report and pay tax on your South African sourced income After you become a non-resident, you are no longer required to submit a South African tax return, unless you still have assets left in the country that are generating streams of income.
It is imperative to understand that changing your tax residency does not mean that you automatically undergo financial emigration, and you may not even benefit from applying for financial emigration.